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Happiness Is a Warm Puppy/Gold Bar/50-Pound Bag of Rice (April 4, 2008) Readers Journal has finally been updated, with 29 new Readers commentaries on a huge range of great topics and three new incisive, fascinating essays (links to your right); Read them all! Also, check out a new feature in the right sidebar below Readers Journal, "This Month's Highlighted Books." Longtime correspondent (and resident Gold Bug) Don E. offered this commentary on why he owns gold. His thoughts inspired my own ruminations on "security" and that led me to food which led to some astonishing charts of agricultural commodities courtesy of frequent contributor Harun I. Yes, it all ties together....
We have seen what Harun has to say on gold. let me give you my more mystical view.Most interesting, Don. Thank you for a provocative view of the benefits of owning gold. It's not required that anyone be interested in buying gold at its relative low points, but I continue to believe that pursuit is a worthy one for us poor dumb types who tend to buy at the peaks instead of the valleys. Personally, though I like the feel of a one-ounce gold coin, nothing spells "basic security" like a 50-pound (22-kilo) sack of rice. Wheat and legumes, too, and of course my stash of water. (This is Earthquake Country, and the water mains around here will last about 15 seconds into a two-minute-long major earthquake.) As you know from both headlines and your recent visits to the supermarket, the cost of basic food items has leaped. Frequent contributor U. Doran sent in this story from the Chicago Tribune which summarizes the impact: Food Price Inflation Changes How We Shop. Rice has jumped 50%, sparking food riots around the globe and causing China, Vietnam and India to impose export restrictions: Panic grips Asian rice trade after India’s move.
Since January, rice prices on the international market have jumped almost 50 percent, rising on almost a daily basis and causing unprecedented volatility in the market even though world stockpiles on the politically sensitive grain remain at the same level as last year.In other words: we're starting to see hoarding on a national scale. Growing up in Hawaii, you see what perceived shortages can do to otherwise rational people. Every once in awhile, the longshoremans union (ILWU) would go on strike, which meant that ships from the U.S. mainland and elsewhere would not be unloaded. The immediate response to the announcement of the strike was somewhat comical: toilet paper would suddenly vanish from every market's shelves. Fearing a shortage of this essential (at least to Americans) item, the citizenry would rush out and create the very shortage they feared. before the strike, having a couple extra rolls of TP was deemed adequate; but once the strike was announced, then a closetful was deemed the absolute miniumum required for a sense of security.
To provide some context for a discussion of agricultural commodities' recent price
increases, here are charts of soybeans and wheat, courtest of Harun I. Click on the
image for a full-sized view of the charts.
Now comes the unknown part: how much of the shortage is "real," i.e. not enough grain to meet demand, and how much is perceived, i.e. stockpiling and hoarding as a defense against the perceived threat of shortage?
Once that mania of fear and insecurity grips a populace, it can take quite awhile for
a sense of plentitude/security to return. In such manias, it is easy to see how wheat
could jump from $10/bushel to $30/bushel, and gold from $1,000/ounce to $3,000/ounce.
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